How will the Taliban contest Afghanistan's mid-September parliamentary elections?

With their only political weapons: terror strikes and fearful headlines.

Scheduled for Sept. 18 -- four years and a week after 9-11 -- the parliamentary elections are the "second act" in Afghanistan's democratic evolution.

The "first act," the October 2004 Afghan presidential election, dealt the Taliban and their Al-Qaida allies a debilitating political defeat. The Afghan people not only selected a president, they rejected terror and fear.

Four years ago, Osama bin Laden designated Afghanistan as the launch pad for his global jihad -- the world war that would make him an imperial caliph. The possibility of democratic elections in Kabul never crossed his demented mind.

The 2004 Afghan election began a democratic surge that had profound effects in Central Asia. With predictable pessimism, the "mainstream" of the self-proclaimed international press missed the story. Despite violent threats from Al-Qaida and Taliban holdouts, however, 8 million Afghan voters didn't miss their chance. The election was a significant step toward victory in the civilized world's global War on Terror -- a war that is as much a war against fear, poverty and anarchy as it is a war against the petty tyrants who harbor and sustain terrorists.

Afghanistan remains a damaged, looted society pulverized by three decades of war, but it now has hope.

This past June, as I walked through an Afghan village, "Jdhooshi," the translator accompanying the American military police patrol, emphasized the long, hard political and economic slog.

Actually, "Jdhooshi" is a nom de guerre, but it fit the spry, gray-bearded 69-year-old Afghan. Actually, I should call him an Angeleno. For three decades, Jdhooshi lived in Los Angeles. But after 9-11, he knew he had to get involved.

"This is a chance to change this place, my country, my first country," he said. "It has suffered so much. Thirty years of war has left it with nothing. Now we, America -- we are giving Afghanistan a chance. I knew I could help by working as a translator for the military. The people, they now have hope -- they know some things can be different."

"Did last year's presidential elections make a difference?" I asked.

Jdhooshi grinned, and I immediately knew the question was stupid. "Of course. The Taliban said it would not happen -- but it did. But there is so much to do, so much still to do."

Part of the "much to do" is creating and training the new Afghan National Army (ANA). The U.S.-led Coalition Joint Task Force-76 (CJTF-76) has that responsibility. Coalition officers rate the ANA as "very effective at the platoon level" (30 to 40 troops). As in Iraq, the goal is to build effective combat battalions (600 troops).

But training isn't a one-way experience. "The Afghan soldiers are able to teach us how the enemy fights," CJTF-76 commander Maj. Gen. Jason Kamiya told me. "The Afghan troops are also very physically fit -- and they will work the daylights out of us."

Kamiya, a 101st Airborne Division vet, also praised their morale. "They have enormous fighting spirit, and when they are in contact (with the enemy), they do not let up."

In late March, CJTF-76 launched Operation Determined Resolve. Determined Resolve was actually a series of military and security operations designed "to set the conditions for a secure election" -- military lingo for stopping Taliban/Al-Qaida terrorists from infiltrating Afghanistan. Operation Vigilant Sentinel, which began in early August, includes Afghan police and military units. Both operations focused on Afghanistan's southern and eastern borders.

The International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), the NATO-led peacekeeping force, is patrolling the northern and western borders. ISAF has 11,000 troops in Afghanistan.

These security preparations, however, aren't the determinative battle. As the Afghan people showed last October, ballots have extraordinary power. It's why September's parliamentary elections will continue the democratic surge.

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